Her father, Timothy Lu, an engineer at the semiconductor company Marvell Technology, said he saw a sign for the camp posted at his daughter’s school. Obviously, given his own proclivity for tech, “I’d like my kid to get involved,” he said, but most importantly, he hoped she was having fun.
“It’s good for her down the road,” Lu said. “It’s a part of learning and exploring.”
Two classrooms down, middle school children installed software to train preassembled robotic vehicles to recognize objects such as a rubber ducky and use their arms to drop the objects into a bucket.
The camps are part of Integem’s offerings for kids from kindergarten through high school; among the programs are “AI Robotics Engineering with AR Coding” and “Intro to AR Art with AI.”
Winfred Lin, a 17-year-old assistant at the camp, is a former participant. He attended an Integem robotics camp two years ago, training AI models using Nvidia’s tiny Jetson Nano computers. The experience sparked a love of game development and opened his eyes to the benefits of getting children acquainted with computer science at a young age.
“In the future, it’s not just going to be software engineers doing computer science. It’s everybody,” Winfred said. “It’s like learning a new language. If you start younger, you learn more naturally.”